The River Wandle is the setting for a free cycle ride in South West London which will see families saddling up and discovering the joy of riverside cycling this Sunday. The ride is part of the Skyride scheme and is a gentle one hour ride ideal for young families.
A number of mass-participation Skyrides have taken place this summer, with huge city rides in Manchester to be followed by Glasgow, Leicester and London. Along with these there are around 400 hosted rides at local venues around the country catering for all abilities from novice to expert.
The River Wandle ride will start and finish at Sainsbury’s Save Centre in Colliers Wood on Sunday and it will be led by experts from national bike organisation British Cycling, who will also provide information and tips on safe cycling. It starts at 2.30pm.
The 7km route will take in local landmarks including Merton Abbey Mills, Morden Hall Park and Ravensbury Park.
The Skyride events form part of Sky’s partnership with British Cycling, which is aiming to encourage more people to dust down their bikes and get passionate about pedalling. Sky is setting itself the target of getting one million more people cycling in the next four years.
Jeremy Darroch, Chief Executive of Sky, said: “We want to get as many people as possible to pick up their bikes again this year; for fun, for fitness. So come and join in, with friends or with family, and be part of a new cycling phenomenon that, we hope, will get one million more people cycling by 2013.”
So, at the same time it's 'cyclists don't use lights and cyclists use lights that are dazzling' - that goes well with 'cyclists cause accidents by...
Perhaps he meant more dangerous to road users in his immediate vicinity.
I personally haven't subscribed to the BBC for 33 years, As I only watch DVDs and videos, radio and read....
Your full post describes very well why the current model isn't viable. Not enough people watching to sell adverts for beer and gambling. Probably...
Norwich cycling said it doesn't cut through and uses an exsiting path parallel with the allotment border.
I tend to agree that regular re-tests is a good idea, although AIUI it's already very hard to get a test, and so there would need to be massive...
The quote from her mother is so sad. No family should have to go through that.
How to make absolutely no sense in just a few short words:...
Not really - just like all those other things, there is a negative externality of driving (increased pressure on the NHS, due to health...
Depends what you want to count (e.g. on the West - how wide you'd cast the net over deaths due to the Western military). But I'd point you in the...